The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) selected the Larrabee Tri-Collector Solution (LTCS) project proposed by Mid-Atlantic Offshore Development (MAOD) and Jersey Central Power & Light Company to establish the first offshore wind project transmission in the United States.
MAOD is a joint venture of EDF Renewables – North America and Shell New Energies U.S. In addition, the board awarded onshore grid upgrade projects to accept offshore transmission from the LTCS to utilities Atlantic City Electric, BGE, LS Power, PECO, PPL, PSE&G and Transource.
The MAOD-JCP&L proposal is estimated to cost $504 million. The necessary onshore grid upgrade projects are estimated to cost $568 million, for a total of $1.07 billion for the full LTCS. It is estimated that the selected projects will save New Jersey ratepayers $900 million compared to the cost of transmission without using this coordinated approach through the State Agreement Approach (SAA). The SAA solicitation closed in September 2021, and proposals for 80 projects were received from 13 transmission developers.
The board’s decision Wednesday was informed by data and analysis from New Jersey’s grid operator, PJM Interconnection. This project represents the first-ever use of the State Agreement Approach between the NJBPU and PJM, using PJM’s competitive transmission planning process to help NJBPU solicit and evaluate 80 different transmission proposals. The board determined that the selected projects best meet the goals of the SAA solicitation and will result in a more efficient and cost-effective means of achieving 7,500 MW of OSW by 2035, the state’s offshore wind goal at the time of the solicitation.
“New Jersey has been at the leading edge of offshore wind development since Gov. Murphy took office, and today’s action is further evidence that we are committed to developing offshore wind and the necessary transmission to shore in the most cost-effective, reliable and responsible manner possible,” said Joseph L. Fiordaliso, president of the NJBPU. “I would like to thank Board staff for a very thorough job of evaluating the many applications we received for this first-in-the-nation coordinated offshore wind transmission solicitation process.”
The board also directed its staff to begin necessary preliminary steps to support a future SAA solicitation, to enable the transmission of New Jersey’s new and expanded goal of 11,000 MW of offshore wind energy by 2040, and to continue its engagement with other states, regional grid operators and other stakeholders regarding a regional approach to offshore wind transmission.
The approved applicants were part of a competitive solicitation process aimed at exploring coordinated offshore wind transmission solutions. The process identified the most cost-effective, environmentally sensitive and ready-to-build means of reliably bringing offshore wind energy to shore. A public process beginning in 2019 included several technical conferences and four stakeholder meetings, which informed the design of the solicitation and the evaluation of responses.
The selected bid requires the project developer to prebuild a single corridor from the shore crossing to the LTCS. This single corridor will be designed to be used by offshore wind projects needed to reach 7,500 MW. This will result in a single onshore transmission corridor which will reduce environmental impact, community disruption and permitting risks. The Board anticipates issuing the third solicitation in Q1 2023.
News item from the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU)
Filed Under: Cables & connectors, Components, News, Offshore wind, Projects